Mr. Landry and Ms. Ayre, it's interesting. This seems to be a relatively new industry by all accounts. I think all of us have agreed that relative to the age of Canada as a country, it's relatively new, but probably from every group I've heard that the only thing that makes this live is tax credits.
My wife has the oldest flower shop in Canada, 1869, in case you were curious. I share that because she doesn't get a tax credit. My daughter owns a beautiful Belgian chocolate shop. You'd like some. I should have brought some for you and I apologize that I didn't. Next time I will though. She doesn't get any tax credits. By the way, she gets what any business gets, which are the federal tax advantages where, thank God, federal taxes have gone down, which is good.
What sets you apart from my wife's flower shop or any business down the street, even relatively newer companies? Frankly, shouldn't they be getting more of these tax credits as well? I'm trying to understand that.
Mr. Landry, do you have a thought on that?